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The way to do it is to remove the metal blade carrier part and in a vise band the sides in just enough to give it a bit of a nip on that plastic nose piece it slides on. That is the very best way to do it.

Ok place the small metal cutter on top of the large metal comb, place the white plastic piece into the top of the cutter with the protruding bit at the back, place the metal bracket with 4 holes on top first locating the front into the white plastic slot, then place the last metal bracket on top with the raised part to the front, then simply hold it all together and put the screws in form the back!

Hi!
I'm not sure about the nature of you question. Firstly if you mean, position the comb (with the adjusting lever on your clipper because your blades wont work, then:)1.
If you move the comb downwards using the lever on the side of your clipper you will get a shorter cut, if you move it forward you will get a slightly longer cut. If your clipper makes a horrible noise, I believe there is a plastic adjuster on the side that you adjust with a flat head screwdriver. This adjusts the springs inside the clipper which effects how central the cutter moves from side to side. Adjust this while the clipper is running. You want your blades to be as central as posssible. If they still do not work, you may need your blades sharpened. This costs £5.90 incl. VAT & Postage www.sheareaseltd.com You could send your clipper to them as well and ask them to re align your blades after sharpening and they'll just charge the extra postage. (extra £5)
Hope this helps!2.
If you mean how to hold the clipper with the blade relative to what you are clipping. You need to hold the clipper so the teeth are not pointing into your project, but not pointing away from it either. Keep the comb parallel to your project. With human hair, cut against the grain, with an animal cut with the grain!
Hope This Helps!

The biggest issue with clipping animals (except sheep which use completely different clippers) is that once you have sharpened blades, you need to go slow and keep then blades oiled and cooled. The KOOL spray by oster works great and the clippers you are using are a good reliable brand and model. When clipping my cocker/schnauzer cross, I have a 1/2 inch guard on it (have to use a 30 or 40 blade with the guards) and it takes about an hour. I stop every 10 minutes or so to let them cool down, spray and oil them.

First when you remove the clipper blade did you notice a plastic part 1" long color gray, if you have lose this part your clipper blade not work. This is call a blade guide.
Clipper blade installation, Place Plastic guide on spring,2 place cutter blade on guide,(this is the smaller blade) now hold cutter blade with two fingers now place comb blade on top of cutter blade (this is the bigger blade) replace screws while holding blades in place.

this is an odd problem. i have two thoughts of what the problem may be.

1. the thin trimmer blade between the foils may be dented causing extra friction that is sufficient enough to keep the shaver from starting from a stopped position. If this is the case, you will need to buy a new foil and cutter set. These are available at shaveroutlet.com. to check this, remove the foil from the shaver. look on the underside and you will see where this center cutters fits to the drive arm on the shaver. move this back and forth with your fingers. if it has a dent or imperfection, you should be able to feel it snag as you move it back and forth

2. your shaver motor brushes may be worn. if this is the case, i would expect that when you do get the shaver running, it is not running at full speed. the part needed to repair this problem is linked below